On Jake Odorizzi, Joey Butler and Jake Elmore, and More

No big deal; when Chris Archer isn't setting MLB records, he's eating healthy. (Photo credit: Joe Nicholson/USA Today Sports)
No big deal; when Chris Archer isn’t setting MLB records, he’s eating healthy. (Photo credit: Joe Nicholson/USA Today Sports)

58 games have come to pass, and despite the sheer number of injuries − both small and large − the Rays are still, somehow, a relevant team. Some guy who used to manage the team coined the phrase, “pitching and defense are in our DNA.” Although that guy is now in some baseball panacea far north of the Tampa Bay area, that phrase holds true.

For example, take their most recent 10-game jaunt that took the team through Baltimore, Anaheim, and Seattle. The Rays ended the road-trip with a 7-3 record, although they averaged a whopping 3.5 runs per game (35 runs total). Why? Because the pitching staff allowed an average of 2.4 runs per game (24 runs total). All this with the big three − Alex Cobb, Matt Moore and Drew Smyly − on the disabled list.

Unfortunately for the Rays, it’s looking like Jake Odorizzi could be added to the DL. Odorizzi left Friday’s game after 4-1/3 innings with an oblique tightness. While he has not officially been ruled out for his next start, it seems likely that he will miss some time in the very least. More bad news for a team that’s been ravaged by injuries.

If you were to ask Rays’ beat writer Marc Topkin, he’d probably tell you that the question isn’t whether Jake Odorizzi will be placed on the DL, rather the question is for how long. Even though an official decision hasn’t been made, Rays manager Kevin Cash said it was “fair to say” Odorizzi would miss some time.

I wouldn’t say a lengthy period of time, but he’s sore, Cash said. We have to be smart with him. The last thing we want to do is get him out there and test it, and then something more or worse happens.

Odorizzi remained optimistic, based on how he felt waking up Saturday:

It was no worse than Friday, he said. I was able to move around and turn around and do all that stuff. I wasn’t locked up or anything like that, so that’s a good sign.

He allowed, however, that he won’t know for sure until he tries to throw, which won’t happen until after he sees team orthopedist Koco Eaton on Monday.

Who will take Odorizzi’s spot in the rotation if the prognosis dictates an addition to the DL? Assuming Odorizzi is out, the off-day Monday gives the Rays some time to adjust their rotation. Nathan Karns and Erasmo Ramirez will make their planned starts on Tuesday and Wednesday (respectively) against the Angels. Tampa Bay could bring Alex Colome back on regular rest on Thursday − Odorizzi’s next scheduled start − or call up a starter from Triple-A Durham, with Matt Andriese or Andrew Bellatti being the most likely candidates. Who gets promoted and when will be complicated, however, based on how long a replacement would be needed.

Dylan Floro is also an interesting, albeit unlikely, option due to the fact that he is not currently on the 40-man roster. And while an addition to the DL would open up a spot on the front end so to speak, the team would have to designate Floro for assignment once Odorizzi returns, opening up the possibility that another team could acquire the prospect off waivers. Too, with the Rays contending, they may want as many roster slots available as possible as we near the trade deadline.

Whatever the case, it is incumbent upon the other starters to pitch deeper into games, regardless of the situation. Alex Colome has now strung together back-to-back six inning affairs after working past the sixth only once this season (May 11 against the Yankees). Erasmo Ramirez has thrown six plus innings twice, and Nathan Karns has done the same four times this season, yet not with consistency. Then again, perhaps it’s time for Cash to take off the reins and allow the above mentioned three to pitch deeper into games.

Better yet, they could pitch deeper and let’s hope Odorizzi can avoid a stint on the DL altogether. I like that option best.

Moving forward.

A question that’s been asked of late, are the numbers that Joey Butler and Jake Elmore have posted real? It’s a fair question since both players have lengthy minor league careers void of consistent play at the major league level. Butler has mostly played in the designated hitter role, giving David DeJesus and Brandon Guyer the opportunity to spend more time in the field, although he has also done well in his limited time playing the outfield. As for Elmore, the mega utility player has spent time in the outfield, third base, second base and most recently at first. He too has done fairly well.

I decided to compare their numbers to those of Desmond Jennings and Tim Beckham − the two players they replaced due to placement on the disabled list. Also included in parenthesis are their ZiPS projections.

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Butler has been a godsend to the Rays, although most scouts would probably tell you that he remains a 4-A ballplayer that will regress at some point, either sooner of later. His projections support that idea. When that happens, Desmond Jennings may be healthy and Butler may be the odd man out. Then again, Jennings may be out for a significant amount of time, and Butler might only regress slightly to his .316 BA/.365 OBP/.496 SLG/.861 OPS/.376 wOBA overall major league career line.

One thing that works in his favor is his ability to hit the ball hard to all parts of the field, showing he’s not a dead-pull hitter. Another thing that works well is his ability to put the ball in play. And while he’s been pretty damn lucky, a .446 BABIP speaks to that, Butler’s batting average on balls in play dipped below .341 only twice in his career; 2010 in 63 at-bats and 2011 in 55 at-bats. My guess, once pitchers adjust to Butler, who has shown that he will swat at pitches 29.5% of the time, those numbers will regress to league average. The question will then be, will he be able to adjust back?

Elmore has offered Kevin Cash flexibility in the field, something that only a few other players on the team possess. It certainly doesn’t hurt that he was recalled on the heels of a 10-game hitting streak at Durham, and that production has carried over with the big-league squad. Elmore is a regression candidate as well, yet with the exception of his SLG, the utility player projects to put up similar numbers to that of Beckham (who also projects to regress). A potential quirk in the ZiPS projection system; Elmore is pegged to post a .308 OBP for the duration of the season which could be an anomaly for the player who has performed under his current rate just three times (a combined 221 total plate appearances) over his career.

Regardless, both players have helped the team in their short time here. Let’s hope someone is able to step up to the task if/when the regression takes place − I’m looking hard at you Nick Franklin, Asdrubal Cabrera, and Rene Rivera.

Noteworthiness

Chris Archer fanned 38 and walked none in his last three starts. That’s now three consecutive games with double digit strikeouts and no walks − a major league history making feat. His 11 strikeouts Sunday gave King Chris the most K’s (108) in the American League; one more than Corey Kluber of the Cleveland Indians. The closest competitor to that duo is Felix Hernandez with 81.

− Worry not, Archer notices your love and affection. He just doesn’t have time for it.

− Tonight marks the beginning of the MLB draft. At number 13, the Rays boast their highest spot in the draft since 2008 when they chose Tim Beckham. Scott Dauer (DRaysBay) put together a draft primer, targeting the possible corner position power hitters, and the pitchers who may be potential candidate for the Rays.

− Craig Edwards (FanGraphswrote an incredibly interesting piece on Major League Baseball’s perception problem as it relates to attendance. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to explain why this article is pertinent to the Rays.

 

Looking Backwards While Moving Forward: Rays Get Kinged, 2-1

Kevin Kiermaier steals third base in the first inning. (Photo credit: Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)
The Tampa Bay Rays’ four-game win streak came to pass Saturday night after Seattle broke a 1-1 tie in the seventh inning in a 2-1 Mariners win. Tampa Bay is now 30-27 and 1-1/2 games out of first in the AL East. 

In our series preview, I put forward the idea that the outcome of each game may come down to which respective hurler happens to blink first. That has been the case in each of the last three games, last night not withstanding. Time for some true talk, raise your hand if honestly thought the Rays were going to put up a run against King Felix. Forget not, Hernandez has been particularly stingy against Tampa Bay, holding the team to just four runs* over the last three seasons. That they even scored a run seems like a minor miracle.

Hernandez seemed sloppy from the jump, and the Rays found themselves in a prime scoring opportunity  in the first inning after Kevin Kiermaier worked a leadoff walk and swiped a couple of bags. Yet Felix fanned Joey Butler and, after allowing a free pass to David DeJesus, put down the next two batters to end the threat. To be fair, the king had the luck dragons working in his favor; in that inning, Logan Forsythe slapped the first of four hard hit liners that happened to be snared by a defender.

Jake Elmore reached on a one-out single in the second, but he was promptly deleted when Nick Franklin hit a liner to Robinson Cano, who turned an inning ending double play.

With the Mariners up by one, Tampa Bay got on the board in the sixth when Kiermaier tripled to right, and scored on a wild pitch. It ended Hernandez’s shutout streak against the Rays at 21 innings.

The Rays came close to taking a lead in the top of the seventh after Asdrubal Cabrera drew a two-out walk in an 11-pitch at-bat against Hernandez. Cabrera found himself in scoring position after being wild pitched to second, but Jake Elmore lined to Austin Jackson in center to end the rally.

Meanwhile Colome did a good job to keep the game close, although it certainly wasn’t clean. He stranded runners on base in each of the first three innings before the M’s broke through in the fourth. Seth Smith blooped a double to left, and moved to third on Logan Morrison’s single to left. Willie Bloomquist plated a run on a single to center. Colome loaded the bases on a five pitch walk of Mike Zunino, but the hurler buckled down and coaxed an Austin Jackson fly-ball out, and Robinson Cano to hit into a 4-6-3 double play to end the threat.

Colome didn’t allow a runner past first in the next two innings, and departed after six.

It was not pretty by Colome, but it was effective.
— Brian Anderson

With Jake Odorizzi’s status in question, it is incumbent upon Kevin Cash to get some length out of his starters. Colome has now strung together back-to-back six inning affairs, after working past the sixth only once this season (back on May 11 against the Yankees).

Seattle took the lead once more in the seventh against reliever Steve Geltz when Jackson hit a full-count no-doubter over the bullpen in left center with one out in the frame. That put Felix Hernandez on the winning side of the ledger. The Mariners have won all 10 starts Hernandez has made against the Rays at Safeco Field. 

*Five, if you include the run last night.

The New What Next

Chris Archer will start Sunday against rookie left-hander Mike Montgomery. Archer finished his last start with a 2.01 ERA and 97 strikeouts, a combination unmatched through June 2 since Boston’s Pedro Martinez in 2001. He became the first Ray ever to strike out 12 or more in back-to-back games in his last start. Montgomery will make his second big league start after he allowing just one run over six innings in his last start against the Yankees. Montgomery was traded by the Rays to Seattle on March 31 in exchange for Erasmo Ramirez. You can read about the pitching matchup in our series preview.

Rays 6/7/15 Starting Lineup

Elmore 3B
Guyer LF
Butler DH
Forsythe 2B
Souza RF
Mahtook CF
Franklin SS
Rivera 1B
Wilson C
Archer RHP

Noteworthiness

— Neither Asdrubal Cabrera, who seemed out of sorts in his seventh inning at-bat against Hernandez last night, nor Longoria are in today’s lineup. The Rays had some concern, after Saturday’s game, that Cabrera may have hyper-extended right elbow, although he said he was fine. Rene Rivera will handle the first base duties.

— Ernesto Frieri cleared waivers and accepted and assignment to with the Triple-A Durham Bulls. Friere was designated for assignment on June 2nd when the Rays, citing the need for long relief in the bullpen, recalled Andrew Bellatti.

— Rene Rivera helped both Colome and Steve Geltz (who followed) by throwing out two would be base-stealers. He’s now thrown out 11 of his last 19:

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— Marc Topkin (Tampa Bay Times) thinks it isn’t a question of if Jake Odorizzi will be placed on the DL. Topkin wrote that manager Kevin Cash said no decisions have been made, but it was “fair to say” Odorizzi would miss some time.

I wouldn’t say a lengthy period of time, but he’s sore, Cash said. We have to be smart with him. The last thing we want to do is get him out there and test it, and then something more or worse happens.

Odorizzi remained optimistic based on how he felt waking up Saturday:

It was no worse than Friday, he said. I was able to move around and turn around and do all that stuff. I wasn’t locked up or anything like that, so that’s a good sign.

He allowed, however, that he won’t know for sure until he tries to throw, which won’t happen until after he sees team orthopedist Koco Eaton on Monday.

The question is, who will take Odorizzi’s spot in the rotation if he is out past the 15-day minimum, assuming he is placed on the 15-day disabled list?

Per Topkin, the off-day Monday off gives the Rays some time to adjust their rotation assuming Odorizzi is out. Nathan Karns will start Tuesday and Erasmo Ramirez Wednesday against the Angels. Odorizzi was scheduled for Thursday, but the Rays could bring Alex Colome back on regular rest, or call up a starter from Triple-A Durham, with either Matt Andriese or Andrew Bellatti being the most likely candidates.

Dylan Floro remains an intriguing option, although he is not currently on the 40-man roster. While the placement of a player on the DL would open up a roster spot, the team would have to designate Floro for assignment following the DL stint, thus the opening the possibility of Floro being acquired by another team via waivers.

Looking Backward While Moving Forward: Rays Win 1-0, Odorizzi Injured

Logan Forsythe hits a home run off Fernando Rodney in the ninth inning. (Photo credit: Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)
Longoria and Odorizzi update: As I Wrote earlier, Evan Longoria will not be in the lineup tonight against Felix Hernandez. Though a reason for his absence was speculated upon, Marc Topkin (Tampa Bay Times) reported, via Twitter, that the Rays third baseman has a sore left wrist. Longoria doesn’t think it’s anything serious, although he may sit out Sunday as well. He told Topkin that there was nothing “acute” with the wrist, just ongoing soreness.

As for Odorizzi, the righty told Topkin that he felt better this morning, mentioning that he was able to move around and had no discomfort when sneezing or coughing, “I’m optimistic.”

The elephant in the room, the Rays tend to be cautious in their handling of pitchers.

We have to be smart with him, Cash said in his pre-game presser. The last thing we want to do is get him out there and test it, and then something more or worse happens.

For context, Alex Cobb sustained an oblique strain last season and missed more than five weeks.
Cash said it was “fair to say” Odorizzi would miss some time, continuing with “I don’t think we’re ready to totally commit that yet. Let’s wait and see what the doctor says.”

Logan Forsythe helped the Tampa Bay Rays notch their fourth straight win by hitting a towering home run off former Ray Fernando Rodney — breaking a 0-0 deadlock top of the ninth. Meanwhile Kevin Jepsen pulled a Houdini act in the bottom half of the frame, solidifying the Rays 1-0 win over Seattle. The victory was bittersweet, however, coming on a night where Jake Odorizzi was pulled after 4-1/3 innings with what has been called left oblique tightness. Tampa Bay, who is now 30-26 on the year, starts the day four games over .500 and a half game out of first in the AL East.

Tampa Bay entered the contest with an MLB most 15 different players on the disabled list — a list that plateaued at 17. Odorizzi, who pitched into the seventh inning in 10 of his previous 11 starts, anchored a staff that found three of its top starters (Alex Cobb, Drew Smyly and Matt Moore) on the DL.

Odorizzi could be the 16th active player on the DL after he departed just 4-1/3 innings and 75 pitches (50 for strikes, 66% K%) into the game.

The ill-fated fifth inning began with an infield single off the bat of Brad miller, Odorizzi awkwardly avoided a collision with Evan Longoria, and a Mike Zunino ground out to first. The righty took the hill against Dustin Ackley, and acted as though something may be wrong on his left side over the course of the four-pitch plate appearance, culminating in a walk.

Yet Odorizzi insisted in an interview following the game that he didn’t feel anything until after he threw his next pitch, to Logan Morrison, when he — clearly wincing — grabbed at his left side and nearly doubled over:

I felt it on that one pitch, it tightened up. It grabbed me. And that was that. You get grabbed and you really don’t know what’s going on type of thing.

Rays manager Kevin Cash and assistant athletic trainer Paul Harker quickly made their way to the mound and made the decision to pull Odorizzi in spite of he wanting to throw another pitch, hoping it was just a cramp.

Odorizzi downplayed the injury:

More startling than anything like that. I’ve never really been injured before and never had it happen on my side when I’m out there throwing, just the unknown, I guess, is more what’s going on than anything. Nobody knows. I don’t know. I could come in (Saturday) and feel half as good as I do now or a lot better. It’s just a wait-and-see process.

The injury was officially called left oblique tightness, yet the team won’t know more until Saturday when they see how he feels. At this point there is no way to gauge the seriousness or how much time, if any, he may miss.

An MRI has not been scheduled at this point:

We’re just coming in tomorrow and see how it feels and we’ll go from there, Odorizzi said. See how I’m feeling 24 hours from now.

The team should know more about Odorizzi’s condition, and how much time he could miss, by tonight (Saturday).

It should be noted, a strained oblique can require two months to heal. If that, indeed, is the prognosis, the Rays would need to recall a stop-gap hurler to take Odorizzi’s place until Matt Moore is reactivated from the DL at the end of June. Taking into consideration an off-day on Monday, Odorizzi’s spot in the rotation wouldn’t come again until Thursday. Any replacement pitcher(s) would be expected cover four-to-five starts in the interim.

Xavier Cedeño was called upon to prevent Seattle from breaking a scoreless tie, which he did by coaxing a pair of ground ball outs from Logan Morrison and Robinson Cano.

Andrew Bellatti took the bump in the sixth and quickly retired the side on 13 pitches. Yet he ran into trouble in the seventh when Bellatto loaded the bases with two outs. The righty escaped, getting Robinson Cano to ground out with the bases loaded to end the frame, and then worked a scoreless eighth too.

Forsythe homered off Rodney to start the ninth, hitting a 2-1 pitch into the left field bullpen. The towering shot was his career high seventh Forbagger of the year. He was also handed the game-ball before getting soaked by his teammates.

Kevin Jepsen, pitching for a third consecutive day, allowed a leadoff triple to Austin Jackson to right center. Yet Jepsen struck out Brad Miller, got Mike Zunino to fly to shallow right (with Steven Souza Jr. throwing a missile home just in case Jackson tried to score), and then Ackley flew out to left, ending the game.

After three straight outings on the mound, Jepsen knew he didn’t have his best stuff, although he had enough:

Ninth inning, one-run ball game. If you don’t have enough adrenaline, something’s wrong.

Jepsen very audibly exhaled following the 27th out:

At that point all the adrenaline and energy coming out of me, I suddenly became pretty tired.

Jepsen was credited with his third save of the year, while Andrew Bellatti, who posted three scoreless innings, got the win.

The New What Next

Alex “El Caballo” Colome (3-2, 5.05) will take the hill against the Mariners on Saturday, pitching opposite of King Felix. Colome held the Mariners to two runs on five hits in 5-1/3 innings back on May 26, retiring 14 of the final 16 batters he faced. Hernandez gave up seven runs on six hits and five walks in 4-2/3 innings on Monday to the Yankees. He has a 16-inning scoreless streak against the Rays and is 5-0 with a 1.61 ERA in nine Safeco Field starts against them. You can read about the pitching matchup in our series preview.

Rays 6/6/15 Starting Lineup

Kiermaier CF
Butler DH
DeJesus LF
Forsythe 2B
Souza RF
Cabrera SS
Elmore 3B
Franklin 1B
Rivera C
Colome RHP

Noteworthiness

— Evan Longoria isn’t in the lineup tonight. Jake Elmore will shift to third and Nick Franklin will take over first base for the first time in his major league career.

Longoria is 6-27 with an RBI, three walks and 11 strikeouts vs. King Felix. Per Roger Mooney (Tampa Tribune), Cash said you look to see who needs a day off when planning a lineup for a guy like Hernandez. This is only the second day off this season for Longo, although it is certainly an odd time for a day off since the team is off Monday.

— At 6-2 on the road trip (thus far), Tampa Bay is assured to come home with a plus .500 record on its westward jaunt.

— The Rays optioned RHP Andrew Bellatti to Triple-A Durham after the game and recalled LHP Enny Romero, citing the need for a fresh arm in the ‘pen.

Announcing our next watch party on July 3, when the Rays take on the Tankees.

Looking Backward While Moving Forward: Ramirez, Rays Take the Series Opener, 2-1

After taking back-to-back road series from defending division champions for the first time in franchise history, Rays set their sights on the Mariners. (Photo credit: the Tampa Bay Rays)
The Tampa Bay Rays won their third consecutive game late Thursday night, edging out Seattle by a score of 2-1. While the Mariners had runners on in every inning but the third, Erasmo Ramirez and five relievers held Seattle to 1-11 wRISP. Tampa Bay, now 29-26 on the season, are 5-2 on a 10-game trip, and just a half game behind the Yankees in the AL East.

Erasmo faced his former team for the first time since being acquired by the Rays this season and was solid, allowing seven hits and a walk over 5-1/3 innings, but just one run. While he got himself into a couple of jams throughout the course of his start, Ramirez was able to escape most of them, with exception of the fifth inning when the Mariners scored their sole run.

In that frame, Dustin Ackley reached on a single up the middle, then moved to third on a base-hit by Austin Jackson. Robinson Cano plated the run two batters later, consequently breaking up the shutout. Yet Ramirez was able to limit the damage by picking off Cano with runners at the corners, then getting Kyle Seager to bounce to second to end the inning after walking Nelson Cruz.

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Ramirez was lifted after throwing only 72 pitches (50 strikes, 69% K%, 13.6 pitches per inning), following a strikeout out Mark Trumbo, beginning a parade of relievers. Here is where I disagree with Rays manager Kevin Cash. First and foremost, with the team coming off an extra inning contest, you’d like to see your starter go a little deeper into the game. To that end, Erasmo didn’t pitch poorly and he was pulled with the sixth and seventh hitters due — a duo (Seth Smith and Brad Miller) who combined to go 1-4 with a single previously.

When you consider that Xavier Cedeno, who entered first, allowed a 2-2 double to start his outing, you get the feeling that Ramirez could have at least finished the inning. It was one of those situations where the relievers were used in the moment, not because they needed to be, rather because Cash decided to hedge his bets and play the matchup.

True, Cash was managing in the moment and perhaps he saw a quirk in Ramirez. However, looking into the future and assuming the Rays will be relevant in August and September, the decision to burn through the bullpen in the early goings could prove costly.

Cedeno was able to get Brad Miller to ground to second before departing. Brandon Gomes, the third pitcher of the inning, struck out Mike Zunino to end the threat. Gomes returned in the seventh and put up a scoreless frame. The righty worked around a one-out single from Austin Jackson thanks to Logan Forsythe, who took away a hit from Cano with a diving stop.

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Cash called it a game-saving play:

It changed the whole inning, and probably the outcome of the game.

Forsythe discussed the play after the game:

I just thought I was in a decent position and when I got to it I tried to get the glove behind it. I saw Austin kind of hesitate because it was more of a line drive … so I knew we had one at second at least.

Jake McGee, who worked in back-to-back games for the first time since returning from the DL, started the eighth and allowed a one-out single to Trumbo. McGee, however, was able to put down the next two batters, culminating in a strikeout of Brad Miller (looking) on an unexpected curve ball.

Since Brad Boxberger was unavailable after pitching 1-1/3 innings the day prior, Cash called upon Kevin Jepsen to close things out. Jepsen started his appearance on shaky ground by walking Zunino on five pitches. Willie Bloomquist entered to pinch-run. Ackley followed by laying down a beautiful sacrifice-bunt which moved Bloomquist into scoring position. Yet Jepsen struck out Jackson (swinging) for the second out, and then Cano (looking) on a 97 mph fastball to end the game — earning his second save.

Offensively speaking, Tampa Bay scored both of their runs in the fourth against LHP Roenis Elias. Joey Butler continued his toasty ways with a single to right, then advanced to second on an Evan Longoria grounder to second. Logan Forsythe was hit on the foot by an 0-2 pitch, then Butler and Forsythe executed a double steal. The Rays swiped three bags Thursday night. Steven Souza Jr. singled to center to put the team on the board. Jake Elmore followed by beating out a double-play ball to score the second run, with help from a good takeout slide at second by Souza.

The Mariners’ lefty was fantastic after that, allowing just two base-runners on singles over the next four innings. Longoria hit a one out double in the ninth against reliever Mark Lowe, though he was left stranded at third to end the threat and the inning.

The New What Next

Jake Odorizzi (4-5, 2.61) will start the second game of the four-game series, opposite of veteran southpaw J.A. Happ (3-1, 3.70 ERA). Odorizzi is 1-1 with a 0.69 ERA in two career starts against Seattle. Happ is 2-2 with a 5.35 ERA in eight career games against the Rays, including a no-decision on May 26, when he gave up seven hits and three runs in six innings. You can read about the pitching matchup in our series preview.

Rays 6/5/15 Starting Lineup

Guyer LF
Butler DH
Longoria 3B
Forsythe 2B
Souza RF
Elmore 1B
Cabrera SS
Kiermaier CF
Wilson C
Odorizzi RHP

Noteworthiness

— Marc Topkin (Tampa Bay Times) writes there is growing concern over Desmond Jennings, whose knee does not seem to be getting better:

After more than five weeks of rest, rehab and reported improvement following a diagnosis of bursitis, Jennings tried to play in an extended spring training game on Monday but felt the soreness again.

Jennings is scheduled to go to the Steadman Clinic in Colorado for another opinion at some point next week.

Cash conceded that there may be a more serious problem than bursitis:

(He is) frustrated by some soreness. Everybody has looked at it and can’t find exactly, (can’t) pinpoint, what’s going on. So hopefully this will provide a little clarity.

It’s not clear whether he’ll undergo a simple evaluation, if Jennings may need an exploratory arthroscopic procedure.

— Thursday was the AL-most 26th time (in 55 games total) the Tampa Bay Rays allowed two runs or fewer. They are 21-5 in those games.

Rays 6/3/15 Starting Lineup, Etc

A pretty good looking day in Seattle. (Photo credit: Marc Topkin)

Rays 6/3/15 Starting Lineup

Guyer LF
Butler DH
Longoria 3B
Forsythe 2B
Souza RF
Elmore 1B
Cabrera SS
Mahtook CF
Rivera C
Ramirez RHP

Noteworthiness

Make sure to check out our Rays vs. Mariners series preview if you haven’t already.

— — Heads up, tonight’s contest will not air on Sun Sports. It will be available via MLB.tv, however.